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England (Counties as in 1851-1901) => England => Topic started by: blinky on Wednesday 26 January 05 18:32 GMT (UK)
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looking for any haines,i know of haines in wiltshire but before 1800 and after1900 they seem to disapear.
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My own Haines ancestors are all from Norfolk, around the western corner of the Broads (Wroxham, Salhouse, Coltishall, etc), and I'd be happy to hear from anyone with similar interests. It's a widespread and common name I think, but the Haines spelling seems to have been less common in early 1800s and quite rare earlier. The spellings Haynes and Hayns (also Hayn and Hain) seem to be more frequent in older records.
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my haines family didnt start in wiltshire and my part of the haines family live in and around essex,so our family could meet up at some point.how far back have you gone with your research?
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I have two Haynes ancestors, both London but may have originated elsewhere. Catherine was born 1846 in South London, daughter of Robert Haynes, a labourer. Never made any further progress yet, but Catherine married Thomas Redfearn in 1865.
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Hello,
my Haynes at the moment reach back to Haworth Yorkshire in abt.1816 when James Haynes married Hannah Jowett, have yet to find James birth, another researcher for the same line says the family originated from the Bristol area, so if anyone comes across a birth of James Haynes abt 1790/1795 give or take a year or two please let me know. I have about four generations upto my grandma who was born 1920 in Yorkshire.
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My own Haines ancestors are all from Norfolk, around the western corner of the Broads (Wroxham, Salhouse, Coltishall, etc), and I'd be happy to hear from anyone with similar interests. It's a widespread and common name I think, but the Haines spelling seems to have been less common in early 1800s and quite rare earlier. The spellings Haynes and Hayns (also Hayn and Hain) seem to be more frequent in older records.
My Haines/Haynes/Hanes family were also from Norfolk. They lived on the Norfolk/Cambs border in Welney & Littleport. I am currently stuck on a marriage of John & Alce HANES. They had a son baptised John in 1769 in Welney but no other children after. John senior remarried in 1775 so presumably Alce died between 1769 and 1775. I'm sure they had earlier children elsewhere so if anyone can identify them or know of a John Hanes baptism pre 1755 I would be very interested.
Regards
Brenda
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My own Haines ancestors are all from Norfolk, around the western corner of the Broads (Wroxham, Salhouse, Coltishall, etc), and I'd be happy to hear from anyone with similar interests. It's a widespread and common name I think, but the Haines spelling seems to have been less common in early 1800s and quite rare earlier. The spellings Haynes and Hayns (also Hayn and Hain) seem to be more frequent in older records.
My Haines/Haynes/Hanes family were also from Norfolk. They lived on the Norfolk/Cambs border in Welney & Littleport. I am currently stuck on a marriage of John & Alce HANES. They had a son baptised John in 1769 in Welney but no other children after. John senior remarried in 1775 so presumably Alce died between 1769 and 1775. I'm sure they had earlier children elsewhere so if anyone can identify them or know of a John Hanes baptism pre 1755 I would be very interested.
In the 1800s my family were living in Welney, Stow Bardolph and Stow Bridge in Norfolk, Littleport in Cambs and Fleet and Gedney in Lincolnshire.
Regards
Brenda
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Loads of Haines in Leicesterhire aroung 1800's . I have my family tree on Genes re-united if you want to look.
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Loads of Haines in Leicesterhire aroung 1800's . I have my family tree on Genes re-united if you want to look.
Thanks for the offer but all my large family were around Littleport/Welney/Stow Bardolph in the 1800s, I've just lost a marriage ceremony for the mid 1700s which I'm sure will not be too far away, it's just more difficult finding it being around the Cambs/Norfolk border.
Brenda
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I've got Haines in my (husband really) tree who came to Canada early 1800's, not sure off hand where in England they came from though.
Karen
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My married name is Haines. My pa/in/law was born in Ballarat in Australia - 1902 - and came to New Zealand as a small boy with his family.
I have read that Haines means " a viney covered cottage " - guess that's just one meaning of the name.
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Just checked into the Haines family of my husband (mother-in-law's maiden name) and seems the started out in Boxgrove Sussex, England in 1614, the son Richard was born about 1639 in Aynhoe, Northampton and then fled England for religious freedom to New Jersey and Pennsylivania, they were quakers and then eventually up into Canada around 1807.
http://www.sharontemple.ca/SThistory.html
Karen
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My family was in Leicestershire until 1884 when they moved to the US. My gggrandfather moved to Hitchin and died there in 1878.
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My own Haines ancestors are all from Norfolk, around the western corner of the Broads (Wroxham, Salhouse, Coltishall, etc), and I'd be happy to hear from anyone with similar interests. It's a widespread and common name I think, but the Haines spelling seems to have been less common in early 1800s and quite rare earlier. The spellings Haynes and Hayns (also Hayn and Hain) seem to be more frequent in older records.
Hi. My family is Haines from Wroxham. I'd love to get in touch and swap infomation
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Hello Karen welcome to RootsChat :)
I am sorry but blinky has turned off all email notification on their topics, we are no longer able to make contact with them for you.
Regards
Sarah